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Sarkozy vows
tough line against rioters
Foreign Desk Report
EAUBONNE (France)—French President Nicolas Sarkozy pledged on Wednesday
to punish rioters who shot at police but sought to ease tensions with an
independent probe into the deaths of two youths that triggered the
unrest. Youths in Paris suburbs and southwestern Toulouse torched
several cars and rubbish bins in the third night of tension, but a heavy
police clampdown in the Paris area saw a sharp drop in violence from the
two previous nights.
Officials reported no major clashes between youths and police. Moments
after arriving back in France from China, Sarkozy sped off to a hospital
in the Eaubonne suburb of Paris where a senior police officer, attacked
at the start of the violence on Sunday, was being treated for serious
injuries.
Sarkozy, a law-and-order hardliner when interior minister during riots
two years ago, praised the officer’s courage and said nothing could
justify such violence. “Those who take it upon themselves to shoot at
police will find themselves in the Assizes Court” which handles serious
cases, he told reporters later. Shooting at police “has a name —
attempted murder.”
“We will find the shooters. We will put in the necessary resources ...
It is not something that we can tolerate, no matter how dramatic the
deaths of these two youngsters on a motorbike may be,” he added. The
violence has revived memories of the riots in 2005, the worst unrest in
France in 40 years, when thousands of cars were torched after two
teenagers were electrocuted in a power sub-station after apparently
fleeing police.
The new wave of violence erupted on Sunday when two teenagers were
killed in a collision with a police car. But an official in the
riot-affected areas said the level of violence overnight had halved from
Monday, when about 80 police officers were injured in clashes with
youths.
Prime Minister Francois Fillon told parliament a heavy police presence
on Tuesday night had helped restore calm: “Last night there were 1,000
police on the ground ... and we saw the results — there was a very
noticeable drop in violence.”
Officials have said the latest unrest was nowhere near the scale of 2005
and was limited to a few areas, though the use of firearms so early in
the disturbances has alarmed police.
During a flurry of meetings apparently designed to show he was ready to
tackle pressing domestic problems after his China trip, Sarkozy met the
crash victims’ parents. He agreed a formal manslaughter probe by an
independent investigating judge would be opened, a key demand of the
families.
“It’s a gesture that is just, and aims to calm the situation which we
would like, in the name of all the families, to be heard everywhere,”
their lawyer Jean-Pierre Mignard said.
A public prosecutor has said an initial crash report cleared police of
blame in what she said was a road traffic accident. Questions remain,
however, over police actions after the crash and the speed with which
help arrived.
Tense relations with police, high unemployment, poor schools, inadequate
housing and tougher immigration laws have created a generation of
frustrated youths in rundown areas. The government said it planned to
unveil a plan to boost jobs in tough suburbs on January 22, but warned
it would not repeat past mistakes by throwing billions of euros at the
problem.
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